otate 9°, the second module 18°, the third 27°, etc. I can only seem to get all 11 modules to rotate the same... I know it probably has something to do with series but I can't figure it out. the screen shot shows the 11 modules rotating to the same degree and the drawing is a plan of what I am trying to accomplish. Thank you so much in advance!…
Added by Daniel Lamm at 6:54pm on September 4, 2014
Writing simulation parameters...3. [2 of 8] No context surfaces...4. [3 of 8] Writing geometry...5. unsupported operand type(s) for +: 'str' and 'list'6. Failed to write Pelle_aperture000 to idf file7. unsupported operand type(s) for +: 'str' and 'list'8. Failed to write Pelle_aperture001 to idf file9. unsupported operand type(s) for +: 'str' and 'list'10. Failed to write Pelle_aperture002 to idf file11. [4 of 8] Writing Electric Load Center - Generator specifications ...12. [5 of 8] Writing materials and constructions...13. [6 of 8] Writing schedules...14. [7 of 8] Writing loads and ideal air system...15. [8 of 8] Writing outputs...16. ...... idf file is successfully written to : C:\Users\Personal\Desktop\TESI\x001\THOR\EnergyPlus\THOR.idf17. 18. Set runEnergyPlus to True!
or this
0. Current document units is in Meters1. Conversion to Meters will be applied = 1.0002. [1 of 8] Writing simulation parameters...3. [2 of 8] No context surfaces...4. [3 of 8] Writing geometry...5. Runtime error (MissingMemberException): 'hb_EPFenSurface' object has no attribute 'blindsMaterial'6. Traceback:line 1567, in main, "<string>"line 2134, in script
i think that i've same problem with my windows...any suggestion???
Thanks for all…
know how to solve.
It appears in
11 - Honeybee Energy Modeling - The Laws of Geometry in E+ Part 3: Curved Geometry
where I need to retrieve .idf file,
and shows this message:
1. Solution exception:'hb_EPZoneSurface' object has no attribute 'punchedGeometry'
I've added .gh file at a state where I meet the problem.
Also, I've looked around the forum and found some mention OpeanStudio related problems, mainly one's lack of it. Could it be the source of the problem, because I only followed Installation Instructions and haven't installed OpenStudio.
…
etting when I merge the three trees, but what I would like to get is:
essentially a tree with 27 branches, each with a single list of either 11 or 21 points.
{0} (N=11)
{1} (N=11)
...
{10} (N=21)
{11} (N=21)
...
{17} (N=11)
{18) (N=11)
{27} (N=11)
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
All the best,
Matt
…
Added by Matt Schmid at 3:06pm on December 4, 2010
nch, xno items in one list)2 divide the list lenght value by the numer of items per branch needed3A generate a list with the series component: the step equal to the target numer of items per branch; the no of items equals the number of target branches
3B generate a list with the series component: the first number of the series equals to the number of items needed (-1 to account for the 0 index); the step size again equal to the target number of itmes per branch as 3A4 feed 3A & 3B to a domain component thus identifying the start -3A- and end -3B- of the domains by which the list will be subdivided5 use a subset component with the domains above thus creating 19 branches with lists having 5 items eachfor lists which are subdivided into branches when the target number of branches is not a multiple of the number of items contained in the list:6 identify if the target number of branches is a multiple of the list by using the modulus component fed by the list lenght -1- and the target number of branches7 identify last index in the 3B series with the item component (reversed to take the last value fed)8 add 6+7 above which dill define the start of the domain that will pick up the remanent items not accommodated in 59 add (+1) to 7 above to define the end of the domain that will pick up the the remanent items not accommodated in 510 feed 8 & 9 to a domain component11 include 10 as part of the subset in 5I'm now trying to understand the components mentioned by Michael...
sn
…
dd(i - 1)out_v.Add(val)out_i.Add(i) End If
eg List Length = 11, Mid = 4 and 5 (not 5 and 6).
Next time we meet I'll buy you a beer. Although I've been thinking about all the virtual beers I've been bought on here and was thinking about setting a link to a paypal account so I can start cashing in on them :))…
Added by Danny Boyes at 6:26am on September 5, 2011
lane that looks like the outline of a gear wheel
2. Scale a bunch of copies of the curve to different sizes (I use 11 different sized curves.)
3. Move each curve vertically to a different Z-height
4. Rotate each curve to get the desired wavy/wiggly effect
5. Create a Loft surface using all the curves.
A critical step when creating the Loft is to add the curves in order - either top to bottom or bottom to top.
Step 4 can be omitted if you want a constant curvature throughout the final part. In this case all you have to do is Twist by the desired amount the Loft surface made from un-rotated curves. …
Added by Birk Binnard at 2:18pm on October 15, 2016